Eucalyptus poisoning soil? (I)

Seven key issues on Eucalyptus and alelopathy
Or seven reasons why stating eucalypts poison soils is mostly... bullshit

Gustavo Iglesias Trabado Contact GIT Forestry Consulting
GIT Forestry Consulting - Consultoría y Servicios de Ingeniería Agroforestal - www.git-forestry.com - EUCALYPTOLOGICS


We frequently receive inquiries at EUCALYPTOLOGICS from concerned gardeners, horticulturalists and even
Eucalyptus timber plantation owners in regard to the widespread notion of these trees "being poisonous to the soil" and "dangerous for understorey flora". Today we hope to help throw some light over this myth.



Giant Eucalyptus camaldulensis and understorey at Inca Botanical Garden, Malaga, Spain, by Dan Anderson, Exploring the World of Trees, a Tree Species Blog / Eucalipto rojo gigante y sotobosque en el Jardin Botanico Inca de Malaga, España, por Dan Anderson, Tree Species / Gustavo Iglesias Trabado / GIT Forestry Consulting, Consultoría y Servicios de Ingeniería Agroforestal, Lugo, Galicia, España, Spain / Eucalyptologics: Information Resources on Eucalyptus Cultivation Worldwide / Eucaliptologics: Recursos de Informacion sobre el Cultivo del Eucalipto en el MundoFig. 1: Healthy understorey plants growing under an Eucalyptus tree. Image courtesy Dan Anderson, www.tree-species.com (Click image to enlarge)

We picked this example to ellaborate on this particularly interesting topic due to the excellent conditions of this tree as evidence of myth being myth. Approaching one hundred years old, the giant E. camaldulensis at Inca Botanical Gardens has had enough time to deplete and poison the soil around it. Doom predictions would say nothing could be growing near it for more than 50 years. Then why a healthy understorey of bromeliads, palms and lush subtropical plants is thriving under this evil Eucalyptus?

Giant Eucalyptus camaldulensis and understorey at Inca Botanical Garden, Malaga, Spain, by Dan Anderson, Exploring the World of Trees, a Tree Species Blog / Eucalipto rojo gigante y sotobosque en el Jardin Botanico Inca de Malaga, España, por Dan Anderson, Tree Species / Gustavo Iglesias Trabado / GIT Forestry Consulting, Consultoría y Servicios de Ingeniería Agroforestal, Lugo, Galicia, España, Spain / Eucalyptologics: Information Resources on Eucalyptus Cultivation Worldwide / Eucaliptologics: Recursos de Informacion sobre el Cultivo del Eucalipto en el MundoFig. 2: Monumental Eucalyptus camaldulensis growing among palms in the Inca Botanical Garden of Malaga, Spain. Image courtesy Dan Anderson, www.tree-species.com (Click image to enlarge)


The answer could not be more simple:
because a plant causing alelopathic effects on its surrounding habitat is not equivalent to a plant keeping infinite arsenals for chemical warfare that affect everything around it.




SEVEN KEY QUESTIONS ON EUCALYPTUS POISIONING SOILS



Question 1: What is alelopathy?


Alelopathy defines a natural type of interaction between different plants, in which one of them has adapted to release to a defined space around it an amount of natural organic chemical compounds during their normal biologic cycle. These alelo-chemicals can, in certain circumstances, add to other natural competitive advantages result of evolutive adaptation to favour the survival, establishment or reproductive maturity of a certain plant against another in a defined space where resources (light, water, nutrients) are limited.


Question 2: Are
Eucalyptus alelopathic plants?

Yes, since Eucalyptus are plants and all plants are alelopathic to some extent, as they all release organic chemical compounds when their discarded biomass degrades, and these natural organic chemical compounds leach on to the soil, where they interact with other elements of local biota.


Question 3: Does alelopathy in
Eucalyptus have something to do with they being exotic species?

No. In Australia, where they are native, they also cause alelopathic impacts on surrounding flora. And in any habitat you can find native plants causing the same sort of impacts on surrounding biota in varying degrees. Alelopathic and exotic are two independent concepts, and linking both as the two parts of a cause-effect relationship shows deep ignorance on basic biological and ecological processes. Pay attention when you see both terms in the same sentence, statement or argument in a discussion, as it normally will give you hints on the speaker.


Question 4: How do
Eucalyptus alelopathic effects impact other plants?

Following the same pattern than any other plant causing alelopathic effects: in several ways, but very rarely as a single factor.

The combined action of at least...
  • Natural events to which many Eucalyptus species have adapted their reproductive processes (e.g. fire) while other plants have not, making less desirable habitat for non adapted to some plants while favouring others
  • Fast development of root systems compared to some plants, which can give them quicker access to soil moisture and making less desirable habitat for water demanding plants there while favouring others
  • Quick canopy development and litter formation, meaning quick shading of understorey and making less desirable habitat for full sun plants there while favouring others
  • And the release of natural organic alelo-chemical compounds to the soil, which can inhibit germination of certain plant seeds while favouring others or contribute directly or indirectly to the slower growth of some plants while favouring others
... can cause impacts on any other element of the biota around Eucalyptus. Each of the other plants thrives between thresholds for any given natural factor affecting survival and growth. Probably many other factors could also be included, but those four are enough to illustrate the complex relationships of biota and environment.

For the case of alelo-chemical compounds considered as a single factor in this equation, each different plant taxon will behave differently, some totally tolerating the available amount of alelo-chemicals perfectly, some being affected to a certain degree, and some being non tolerant. It is a dynamic process, and it activates further adaptative processes in all the other plants. Those unaffected will keep growing and reproducing, those non critically affected will evolve towards tolerance given enough genetic variability so some will keep on growing and reproducing, and those non tolerant will be replaced in their ecologic niche by other organisms that will keep growing and reproducing. Evolution under our noses.

A dynamic ecosystem in continuous adaptation. But not anihilation, sterilisation or desertification. Again,
pay attention when you any of these or similar terms together in the same sentence, statement or argument in a discussion, as it normally will give you hints on the speaker.


Question 5: Can we safely grow other plants under Eucalyptus in our gardens?

Yes, but results will largely depend on... what your garden is like, what your Eucalyptus are like, what plants you are planting under them and how you manage this small ecosystem. Each plant will have a maximum and minimum treshold for each main restriction to survival and growth, be it water availability and use, tolerance to shade, abundance of nutrients or tolerance to any of the organic compounds present in soil and being released by the Eucalyptus and any other plant nearby. Or any other factor having influence in the final outcome.

Each of your gardens will become a real laboratory and you will have the opportunity to observe what is going on and realize that you cannot blame alelopathy for your other plants dying if you have not watered them during that severe summer drought.


Question 6: What about cultivated forests based on Eucalyptus as main timber species?

This question alone could yield a very long argumentation. It is more suitable as a separate ellaboration, since multiple concepts need to be introduced during its discussion, many of them related to environmental impact assessment, landscape scale considerations, management regimes, and the dynamics in space and time of this more complex than a garden but yet simplified ecosystem any cultivated forest is, irrespectively of the tree species in consideration and its character of native or not to a particular ecosystem.

But, to not let you go with empty pockets, enough mentioning quickly that, the same way you can grow garden plants in the understorey of an eucalypt, many possibilities arise for a wider scale policulture (simultaneous cultivation on the same soil) involving Eucalyptus as tree cover. There are countless examples of these agroforestry systems in all five continents, from relatively simple ones involving pasture or natural grazelands plus Eucalyptus trees (silvopasture) to relatively complex serial crops (multicrop) as sugarcane plus Eucalyptus; maize plus Eucalyptus; pineapple plus Eucalyptus; coffee plus Eucalyptus; Leucaena plus Eucalyptus; cotton plus Eucalyptus; rice, beans and Eucalyptus... as many combinations as adventurous agronomists.

As you can imagine, if the myth of Eucalyptus sterilising soils or making it unusable for every other plant sustained itself, none of these would be possible. But they are. Yet once again, pay attention when you see any of these or similar terms together in the same sentence, statement or argument in a discussion, as it normally will give you hints on the speaker.


Question 7: Why is the myth of
Eucalyptus poisoning soils so popular then?

Ahh... now that is a good question, isn't it? It has also many answers, but let's keep it simple.

Because the average urbanite Western citizen is deeply ignorant on agriculture, forestry, the dynamics of ecosystems or long term evolution of landscape parameters by human action.

Because the average gardener, farmer, landowner or investor in trees is too busy making a project work to find time for independent assessment of such questions.

And because there are individuals with either high levels of ignorance, narrow vision or enough knowledge but despicable moral behaviour who keep promoting myth over science and propagating fallacies to discredit one of the most versatile, efficient, productive and diverse plant groups in the world. Genus Eucalyptus.

To all these but especially the last kind, EUCALYPTOLOGICS cordially extends an invitation to join foresters, agronomists and farmers of the world for manual understorey control on those plants that do not grow under Eucalyptus, to grab a tool and labour the understorey crops of Eucalyptus based agroforestry systems that cannot grow on sterilised soils and to enjoy the wildlife that cannot live under the protection of these trees. You can bet that a huge percent of them won't abandon their comfortable chairs for the challenge and will keep behaving like ostriches.

EUCALYPTOLOGICS: GIT Forestry Consulting Eucalyptus Blog / Information Resources on Eucalyptus Cultivation Worldwide / Forestry Engineering, Eucalyptus Seed, Eucalyptus Plants, Eucalyptus Wood, Eucalyptus Honey, Eucalyptus Essential Oil, Eucalyptus Forests, Eucalyptus Plantations, Eucalyptus Timber, Eucalyptus Lumber, Eucalyptus Furniture, Eucalyptus Veneer, Eucalyptus Plywood, Eucalyptus MDF Board, Eucalyptus Cellulose, Eucalyptus Paper, Eucalyptus Biomass, Eucalyptus Energy, Eucalyptus Floristry, Eucalyptus Foliage, Eucalyptus Garden / Ingenieria Forestal, Semilla de eucalipto, Plantas de eucalipto, Madera de eucalipto, Miel de eucalipto, Aceite Esencial de eucalipto, Bosque de eucalipto, Plantacion de eucalipto, Muebles de eucalipto, Tablero de eucalipto, MDF de eucalipto, Celulosa de eucalipto, Papel de eucalipto, Biomasa de eucalipto, Energia de eucalipto, Ramillo Verde Ornamental de Eucalipto, Jardin de EucaliptoGIT's Eucalyptology Topics

Subscribe to receive EUCALYPTOLOGICS via RSS



© 2007-2008 Gustavo Iglesias Trabado. Please contact us if you want to use all or part of this text and photography elsewhere. We like to share, but we do not like rudeness.

4 comments:

  1. Thanks for such a thorough explanation!

    Dagny
    www.onnotextiles.com
    organic apparel

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks to you Dagny for reading neutral opinion :-)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Postat av: Ludvig
    Datum: fredag, 27 juni 2008, 10:16
    Som svar till: Eucalyptus poisoning soil? (I) (Gus)

    [why a healthy understorey of bromeliads, palms and lush subtropical plants is thriving under this evil Eucalyptus?]

    Extra fertilizing?

    Hum, so you imply that euc's are NOT EVIL? For example primulas are obviously wicked in a sinister way (too pretty to be right), would it not be reasonable to conclude that euc's too with their long scythe like leaves and ragged trunks are doomed to the darker areas of afterlife?

    Thanks Gus for your articles. I'll read it and come back with a serious comment.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Some irony is always funny Ludvig :-)

    For gardening, alelopathic effects of Eucalyptus should be the least concern, independently of which understorey plants are chosen. But wise choice and regular garden maintenance are obviously key for success :-) As in any garden design taking advantage of plant combinations.

    For forestry, this myth used by interested parties for more than 25 years to discredit Eucalyptus plantations has become quite obsolete for more than a decade.

    There is a big gap of fact, ecological science and basic knowledge on plant biology between methodically proving one plant type is alelopathic to claim it sterilises soil and is incompatible with any understorey. A jump from science to folklore.

    Surprisingly, some people still consider this debunked myth as viable in their line of thought when discussing Eucalyptus. Reading old and outdated non scientific literature has these risks. Too big a jump to take it seriously. And a good source of laughs from every quarter :-)

    ReplyDelete